Now a slightly different heads up for users of LibreOffice - I just installed it, went great except that it popped up the welcome page for openoffice on openoffice.org.
On trying to run it, it comes back with an error: “The dynamic link library MSVCR90.dll could not be found …”. This will also prevent Avast from opening! you’ve been warned!
Heading over to their website now to report it!
Edit: It also removed MSVCP90.dll - both files can be found in the LibreOffice installed folders, just copy them to your system32 folder and all is well!
also be warned that the version of LibreOffice offered on the new site is OpenOffice 3.3 beta…Okay, I tried it already weeks before this story with Oracle and the split, and it was obviously a non-finish version so I reverted back to 3.21. Now it shouldn’t be long until LibreOffice delivers the final version of 3.3.
As to Java…can’t tell what’s going to happen. Not binding java with the office suite isn’t a problem at all and you can install Java separately (stating obvious things here). No the problem is whether or not LibreOffice will require Java, and how it would run without Java. This said it’s always been possible to run OOO without Java, just a few minor restrictions in the interface. There’s a web page giving the details, i don’t have the link anymore, it just shows what works and what doesn’t in OOO when Java isn’t installed. Now I hope that “LibreOffice” won’t need java at all to be honest. java has vulnerabilities, is slow etc…
My guess is that the team there will dismiss Java and use something else,as I can’t see an Open Source foundation pay a fee to Oracle…time will tell…
Basically, as I mentioned above, OpenOffice does some naughty things on uninstalling it, and it will cripple Avast! (and any other software that relies on these dlls) in a W2K system and some versions of Win XP too.
Bug reports have been opened on the respective sites
Thanks Logos, however that information was included in my other post. I didn’t provide a link so that people would get the latest version by a quick search for it rather than getting a possibly out-dated version a few months down the road
I love it. The darling of the open source crowd has now become malware. OpenOffice has never been any good and never did what it claimed it could in opening any file made by MS Office.
Just commenting on how it removes essential .dll files when it’s uninstalled, crippling other applications such as Avast!.
And–no—the point is not that I like MS, but that I have tried OpenOffice and it never delivered on it’s promises of compatibility. If it would have, I might be using it today.
No, Tech, read what is removed. The .dlls in question are not Avast! specific files but rather parts of the C++ package that Avast! depends on in order to run. I know the gui part of Avast! will not open without those files but I’m not sure if the protection itself is affected.
Huh, I didn’t know that, probably because I’ve never tried to remove it. Don’t programs usually warn if they are removing shared components, and ask you if you want to keep them? I remember many programs doing this on my Dad’s old computer when I tried to uninstall them.
It’s only happening with the latest version when you upgrade from a previous one. It’s obviously a bug that will be fixed but I still find it somewhat humorous.
exactly, the self-defense module defends Avast software, nothing else, so certainly not Visual Studio, even if Avast needs it and they included it in the package ;D Now yeah, that’s pretty bad that OOO 3.3 beta got such a bug. It never un-installed Java, wonder why it removes C++, even if like Avast it needs it and has it, like Avast, in the package.
@DCH48 >>> most OpenOffice users are quite aware that this suite quality is far below the standards of quality of Microsoft Office. But in most cases, OpenOffice will just suits the needs, and it’s free, when MS Office remains extremely expensive and not worth the investment for people who just need to type letters. There’s nothing to demonstrate, that’s how OOO became popular, not because it’s good, but because it’s good enough for a majority.
I understand that and if I only needed a suite to do those things it would be more than sufficient. It’s certainly better than MS Works. However, I have some files that I need to use on a fairly regular basis that are not compatible with OO. One in particular is a very involved spreadsheet with myriads of complex equations that I would have no clue how to write myself. OO is probably very good for people who are going to create and use files themselves but for complex files you may have to import that were created in MS Office, it just doesn’t always work.
My point is that OO is always held up as a shining example by many of the MS bashing crowd and now it has developed a major flaw that makes it act like malware. I just found it funny.